"Not hammer-strokes, but dance of the water, sings the pebbles into perfection."
— Rabindranath Tagore

Friday, November 25, 2016

In memory of John Heuer

In memory of my friend, John Heuer, who died last week. We were setting up these signs to welcome Karl Rove and the Republicans to Asheville airport. It was a lot of fun. I think this was in 2005. John was always willing to support and implement any plans I had, and I always supported his plans. During this time frame, we worked on impeaching Bush. We both worked on Progressive Democrats of NC too.++++++++++++++Here are some of John's own words that were posted on Facebook:

From Wade Fulmer:

John Heuer, RIP, peacemaker, soul and spirit for peoples (via W.R.)

“I was born in 1946, a year after my father returned from Europe, where he served as a US Army Lieutenant MP during WW II. Both of my grandfathers served in WW I, one killed, one crippled. Three uncles served in WW II, 2 killed, one wounded and became a POW. My only cousin to serve in Viet Nam was crippled. My father was relatively lucky, although the stench from the Buchenwald Camp stayed with him until his death at age 90.

Viet Nam was my generation’s opportunity to serve the flag. I forfeited my student deferment by dropping out of college and signed on as an Ordinary Seaman on a ship bound for Viet Nam. What I saw in Qui Nhon confirmed my worst fears that my country was involved in great crimes against the people of Viet Nam, her neighbors, and our own servicemen and women.

I refused induction into the Army of Richard Nixon in 1970. I came to North Carolina to restore my good citizenship as a VISTA volunteer in 1976. My wife and I raised 2 boys. Jack and Gordon are now of fighting age, facing their own generation’s “wars of choice.”

I am grateful that my boys did not choose military service. But I am furious that, while my boys are safe, other children are sent to die for lies. And I am challenged to do whatever I can do, to see that my children’s children, and yours, may know a world without war.”

+++++++++++++++++

From David Swanson:

I knew John Heuer was elderly from the day I met him, years ago, and came to know him as one of the most dedicated advocates of peace on earth. Losing him is a blow. He was youthful, vibrant, recently married, and intent on ridding the world of pointless mass slaughter. John was active in every organization and independently. He advanced nonviolent action, lobbying, education, and inspiration.

John wrote this four years ago:

Dear young citizens,

First, I want to congratulate you on your many accomplishments. Second, I want to counsel you on your roles as citizens.

When I graduated 8th grade in 1960, citizens could not vote until they were 21. Boys could be drafted into the army and sent to war at age 18, but they could not fully participate as citizens, including engagement in public, democratic decisions about whether or not the nation should send our boys to war. This travesty was somewhat remedied by passage of the 26th amendment to the US Constitution in 1971, granting the right to vote to 18 year-olds.

I say “somewhat” a remedy, because the issue of the rights, responsibilities, privileges and duties of citizens under the age of 18 have not been addressed. It is these rights, responsibilities, privileges and duties about which I write today: Your citizenship.

As rising 9th graders, you are well aware that your education is, as yet, incomplete. But it will come as a surprise to many and a shock to some to learn that your education has contained deep strains of fraud, about who actually runs our government and how. Here are three examples:

OLF – The US Navy proposed construction of “Outlying Landing Fields” (OLF) in wildlife sanctuaries near North Carolina’s east coast, in order to practice landings and take-offs for military aircraft. Public outcry caused the Navy to scuttle these plans.

Sonar Training Field off the Florida—Georgia coast. The Navy has proposed designating hundreds of square miles of Atlantic Ocean off the coast of the southern US for submarine sonar training, despite opposition of environmental groups which point out that these areas are breeding grounds for whales, and that high frequency sonar is known to drive marine mammals insane. The US Supreme Court overruled the environmentalists with the judgment that, while there could be incidental injury, there was also a lack of proof that the sonar testing area would threaten any species’ extinction.

$185 Billion Dollars is what our government proposes to spend in the next 10 years to modernize our nuclear weapons arsenal. It is difficult to measure (or imagine) $185 Billion, but it would pay for a lot of school lunches, teachers’ salaries and school nurses. Besides, what business do we have maintaining a military arsenal designed to incinerate cities?

When you consider these government programs, you have to wonder if our government has gone mad, and what we, as citizens, of all ages, can do about it.

Why don’t we hear more about these grave assaults on planet earth and this terrible squander of our wealth? The fact is that the agents that propose these travesties are the same ones that often own our newspapers and write your textbooks.

So, what are we to do? One of the 1st steps, I think, is for you to understand that the wealth being squandered and the planet being desecrated belongs to you, your generation, your children, grand children and posterity.

The 2nd step is to realize, however painfully, that your parents and grandparents have failed to establish your legacy of peaceful nations living together on an abundant earth.

The 3rd is to exercise your rights, responsibilities, privileges and duties of your citizenship to carefully study your local resources in order to propose a reconfiguration of those resources to meet the needs of your community, and to engage your peers in an earnest identification of those needs. Start with identifying the military footprint in your district and discuss how much, if any, that investment enhances the security of your community, and how redirecting that investment could improve the security of your community. Use your networking capabilities not just for socializing, but for building solidarity among your peers. Use that solidarity to demand a school curriculum that addresses the needs of your community or create your own curriculum.

Finally, a word about citizenship. Many of you go to school with non-citizens of the USA. Please recognize them as guests, and afford them as much hospitality as you can. Remember, your US citizenship may be established by the Constitution and subsequent laws, but we are all world citizens by virtue of our birth.